• The student uprising is fighting for all of us

    From NefeshBarYochai@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 26 04:04:00 2024
    XPost: uk.legal, soc.culture.jewish, alt.politics.democrats
    XPost: soc.culture.british, alt.atheism

    Dear students,

    What an honor it is to stand with you all, and to stand with you not
    as teacher or writer but shoulder-to-shoulder as comrade and
    accomplice. What an honor to witness this courage and this clarity, to
    be just a small part of the life-affirming time you have opened-up in
    this asphyxiating genocidal present.

    Our liberal ruling class is fond of platitudes about being on the
    “right side of history.” But these always come long after that history
    has been made and tamed. Let them keep their platitudes. One day they
    will, no doubt, turn them on this moment too; but today it is you, in
    the largest student movement for generations, that are making history.
    Today it is you who teach, today it is you who educate, today it is
    you who lead. And what you’re teaching and learning and enacting in
    these spaces is worth a million classrooms.

    You know as well as I do that this struggle is long and will remain
    fiercely contested by the powers that be. They will keep coming for
    you, first with their overseers of “civility,” those purveyors of
    “complexity and nuance,” then with their goons and thugs — uniformed
    and un-uniformed.

    In the dead of night, they will come for you, they will tear gas you,
    pepper spray you, shoot you with rubber bullets. They will try to
    silence you, smear you, arrest you, scare you. Worse still, they’ll
    patronize you, and talk about your misplaced enthusiasm or abused
    privilege, or how you need to read a bit more history, or how you’ll
    one day outgrow this naivety; they’ll send out their entire gaggle of authorized stenographers to “advise” you, to “counsel” you on the
    timbre of your rhetoric or the militancy of your demands (lest you
    alienate the “community”), or, to “teach” you about the myriad
    complexities of modern financial investments that couldn’t possibly be
    divested from things as mundane as genocide or apartheid. But they can
    never take away what you and your comrades across the globe have
    already achieved, the future you’re already engendering in joining the
    struggle for Palestinian liberation.

    If Palestine has ignited our planetary consciousness once again, it is
    your movement that insists on rising to the moment at the very core of
    the imperial world. It is you who have refused to let genocide become
    our normal; you who have refused to accept “business-as-usual” in the
    shadow of the mechanized slaughter of thousands of children. You who
    have refused complicity in a genocide effectively administered by the
    world’s most powerful states in the advanced capitalist west, a
    genocide the liberal democracies of “the free world” fall over
    themselves to arm, finance, rationalize, and abet. And in doing so,
    you have refused our collective gaslighting; you remind us that we’re
    not actually going insane, that this sense of madness is the only
    human response to this global choreography of carnage, to image after
    image after image of ashen lifeless children being pulled out of the
    rubble in the name of “western civilization and values.”

    It is you who remind us that we revolt not because we have a choice,
    but because we can longer breathe. When Aaron Bushnell, whose act of self-sacrifice in opposition to this genocide remains entirely
    incomprehensible to our political order, charged that “this is what
    our ruling class has decided is normal,” he could not have asked for a
    more worthy response. You have picked up Aaron’s mantle, and you honor
    it. As you honor the martyrs of Gaza and Palestine in Hind’s Hall,
    Shireen Abu Akleh Hall, the Lama Jamous Center, and the Refaat Alareer Encampment.

    To the cynical weaponization of identity politics and discourses of
    safety, you have enacted spaces of love and comradeship across
    difference; the beautiful scenes of Passover celebrations in
    encampments under a sea of protective Palestinian keffiyehs have on
    their own shattered the racial-colonial common sense and aesthetic
    order of Euro-American Zionism. But you have also done this with a
    clarity that continuously foregrounds the Palestinian struggle and
    rejects the demonization of Palestinian resistance, including its
    unequivocal right to a war of national liberation. In doing so you
    help us rediscover the language, historical literacy, and courage of
    the Left we still hope to become.

    You know that the fight for Palestine, like the fight for Black lives, indigenous sovereignty, socialist futures, and open borders, is a
    fight for us all. And you also know that the slaughter of Palestinians
    today is prefiguring the slaughter that awaits millions on a burning
    planet tomorrow.

    I see in your uprisings the cumulative knowledge that you have
    cultivated over years of organizing, study, and labor, in meetings and classrooms, on the streets and behind barricades. Your urgency and
    militancy grow organically from this knowledge. You know that the
    fight for Palestine, like the fight for Black lives, indigenous
    sovereignty, socialist futures, and open borders, is a fight for us
    all. And you also know that the slaughter of Palestinians today is
    prefiguring the slaughter that awaits millions on a burning planet
    tomorrow, that the algorithmic killing sprees of AI-powered drones and quadcopters are already making their way across the earth’s surface,
    that the homicidal sadism of a humiliated Zionism lurks in every
    frustrated supremacist project. You know that the systems of
    surveillance, incarceration, and segregation over there are at work in
    the border regime and carceral state over here.

    In this, you remind us that Palestine condenses our struggles.
    Palestine is the name of an inassimilable excess that can’t be
    captured in late capitalism’s regime of signs; it can’t be captured
    because class power — that self-conscious power of capital’s ability
    to command and that runs between the boards governing our academic
    institutions and the corporate-financial world — remains an imperially
    derived power, still entirely contingent upon war and plunder. And so,
    we — we the exploited, the looted, the dispossessed, the racialized,
    the illegalized, the wretched — see ourselves in Palestine.

    In truth I’ve always known it’s your generation that would make this breakthrough. Not just because I didn’t subscribe to the tales of your attention deficits, nor because I have an inflated sense of your
    abilities. But simply because of the historical challenge you have,
    for better or worse, inherited. It is you, born in the shadow of the
    great recession, active shooter drills, and the forever wars, that
    have come of age in the global disorder of the slow collapse of the
    unipolar imperial world. In fact, you were born into a temporality of
    crisis that is uniquely yours: indefinite secular stagnation on the
    one hand and imminent climatic collapse on the other.

    But it’s not simply that you’ve inherited climate catastrophe, an
    entirely looted commons, neo-feudal inequality, and all but broken
    public institutions, but that the way out of these crises looks harder
    than ever. In some way I believe you’re better for it — for one, your
    nose for elite-ordained bullshit is all the sharper. But the risks too
    are grave. Nothing would’ve been easier for those in your generation
    than a turn to reaction, or dissociation, or to any kind of escapism.
    Instead before our very eyes, the best of you have decided on
    revolutionary love. It’s no wonder our ruling class is so dumbfounded.
    That your uprising has emerged on the terrain of the university is no coincidence. It’s the university above all that concentrates the
    historical contradictions of our age. And like the good dialecticians
    you all intuitively are, you know that in the contradiction lies the
    hope. Nothing could be more telling of the current scale of the
    contradictions and indeed the crisis of the university than the
    hysterical, brutal militarized response to your protest.

    You’re practicing everything that academic administrators profess to
    value: collective democracy, civic action, selflessness, empathy,
    diversity, courage, and risk-taking. Yet when these cease to be a
    series of empty signs circulating as operations of value at the behest
    of finance capital, they become a danger. When the university has been
    entirely financialized then divestment appears like a terminal threat.
    When the “worth” of the university becomes overwhelmingly an index of
    financial circuits and flows, of market confidence and “belief,” then
    of course the pageantry of robes, regalia, bagpipes, and syrupy vapid commencement speeches attains a hollow sacredness of its own. When
    “the show” is all there is, then of course it must go on even as children—pulled out from the rubble in pieces at a rate of about 95 a
    day every day for 7 months (how’s that for returns?) — are slaughtered
    by weapons our universities help finance.

    The truth is that our universities are financialized corporate
    entities that leak. What we do in them is a kind of leakage that has
    to be captured and regulated as value. Everything from the training of
    critical thought to the ethics of critical pedagogy, from radical
    study to the questioning of given narratives and histories is a
    leakage that somehow the university-as-private-equity-firm both
    depends on and dreads, both valorizes and heavily regulates.

    Today it’s precisely these leakages that the rightwing assault on
    higher education is coming for. They’re coming to plug the gaps. The Congressional witch-hunts are just the latest iteration. They’re
    plugging the gaps, taking the regulation to its logical conclusion,
    because the ruling classes know very well the size and magnitude of
    the crisis that is not imminent but already here. They know they’ve
    left you with a burning planet, crumbling infrastructures, atrophied democracies, and foreclosed futures. They don’t need people like you
    who think, who question, who critically parse, and less still, people
    who are committed to causes like anti-imperialism and genuine
    universalisms.

    They need technicians, financiers, engineers, and the kind of quiet
    cold competencies of the managerial paradigm; they need people who are
    not invested in the world but invested in stocks, or better yet,
    invested in themselves as figures of a kind of stock, as human
    financial portfolios. And if they have to gut the university to get it
    done, if they have to mobilize every piece of institutional and
    repressive power to do so, then they will. Yesterday it was critical
    race theory. The day before that, trans rights. Today it’s Palestine
    and anti-Zionism — the script changes, but the play is the same.

    The fight for Palestine and divestment today, then, is also a fight
    against the corporatization of the university, against its
    hyper-exploitation of precarious and contingent labor, against its centralization around technocratic administrations, a fight for its
    genuine democratization. It’s a fight for and against the university.
    And if the university is to have any future beyond its corporate
    capture, it will be you and your allies who forge it.

    What an honor it is to step into this breach with you.

    Long live the student uprising, long live Palestine!


    https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/the-student-uprising-is-fighting-for-all-of-us/

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Michael Ejercito@21:1/5 to NefeshBarYochai on Sun May 26 08:59:02 2024
    XPost: uk.legal, soc.culture.jewish, alt.politics.democrats
    XPost: soc.culture.british, alt.atheism

    NefeshBarYochai wrote:
    Dear students,

    What an honor it is to stand with you all, and to stand with you not
    as teacher or writer but shoulder-to-shoulder as comrade and
    accomplice. What an honor to witness this courage and this clarity, to
    be just a small part of the life-affirming time you have opened-up in
    this asphyxiating genocidal present.

    Our liberal ruling class is fond of platitudes about being on the
    “right side of history.” But these always come long after that history has been made and tamed. Let them keep their platitudes. One day they
    will, no doubt, turn them on this moment too; but today it is you, in
    the largest student movement for generations, that are making history.
    Today it is you who teach, today it is you who educate, today it is
    you who lead. And what you’re teaching and learning and enacting in
    these spaces is worth a million classrooms.

    You know as well as I do that this struggle is long and will remain
    fiercely contested by the powers that be. They will keep coming for
    you, first with their overseers of “civility,” those purveyors of “complexity and nuance,” then with their goons and thugs — uniformed and un-uniformed.

    In the dead of night, they will come for you, they will tear gas you,
    pepper spray you, shoot you with rubber bullets. They will try to
    silence you, smear you, arrest you, scare you. Worse still, they’ll patronize you, and talk about your misplaced enthusiasm or abused
    privilege, or how you need to read a bit more history, or how you’ll
    one day outgrow this naivety; they’ll send out their entire gaggle of authorized stenographers to “advise” you, to “counsel” you on the timbre of your rhetoric or the militancy of your demands (lest you
    alienate the “community”), or, to “teach” you about the myriad complexities of modern financial investments that couldn’t possibly be divested from things as mundane as genocide or apartheid. But they can
    never take away what you and your comrades across the globe have
    already achieved, the future you’re already engendering in joining the struggle for Palestinian liberation.

    If Palestine has ignited our planetary consciousness once again, it is
    your movement that insists on rising to the moment at the very core of
    the imperial world. It is you who have refused to let genocide become
    our normal; you who have refused to accept “business-as-usual” in the shadow of the mechanized slaughter of thousands of children. You who
    have refused complicity in a genocide effectively administered by the world’s most powerful states in the advanced capitalist west, a
    genocide the liberal democracies of “the free world” fall over
    themselves to arm, finance, rationalize, and abet. And in doing so,
    you have refused our collective gaslighting; you remind us that we’re
    not actually going insane, that this sense of madness is the only
    human response to this global choreography of carnage, to image after
    image after image of ashen lifeless children being pulled out of the
    rubble in the name of “western civilization and values.”

    It is you who remind us that we revolt not because we have a choice,
    but because we can longer breathe. When Aaron Bushnell, whose act of self-sacrifice in opposition to this genocide remains entirely incomprehensible to our political order, charged that “this is what
    our ruling class has decided is normal,” he could not have asked for a
    more worthy response. You have picked up Aaron’s mantle, and you honor
    it. As you honor the martyrs of Gaza and Palestine in Hind’s Hall,
    Shireen Abu Akleh Hall, the Lama Jamous Center, and the Refaat Alareer Encampment.

    To the cynical weaponization of identity politics and discourses of
    safety, you have enacted spaces of love and comradeship across
    difference; the beautiful scenes of Passover celebrations in
    encampments under a sea of protective Palestinian keffiyehs have on
    their own shattered the racial-colonial common sense and aesthetic
    order of Euro-American Zionism. But you have also done this with a
    clarity that continuously foregrounds the Palestinian struggle and
    rejects the demonization of Palestinian resistance, including its
    unequivocal right to a war of national liberation. In doing so you
    help us rediscover the language, historical literacy, and courage of
    the Left we still hope to become.

    You know that the fight for Palestine, like the fight for Black lives, indigenous sovereignty, socialist futures, and open borders, is a
    fight for us all. And you also know that the slaughter of Palestinians
    today is prefiguring the slaughter that awaits millions on a burning
    planet tomorrow.

    I see in your uprisings the cumulative knowledge that you have
    cultivated over years of organizing, study, and labor, in meetings and classrooms, on the streets and behind barricades. Your urgency and
    militancy grow organically from this knowledge. You know that the
    fight for Palestine, like the fight for Black lives, indigenous
    sovereignty, socialist futures, and open borders, is a fight for us
    all. And you also know that the slaughter of Palestinians today is prefiguring the slaughter that awaits millions on a burning planet
    tomorrow, that the algorithmic killing sprees of AI-powered drones and quadcopters are already making their way across the earth’s surface,
    that the homicidal sadism of a humiliated Zionism lurks in every
    frustrated supremacist project. You know that the systems of
    surveillance, incarceration, and segregation over there are at work in
    the border regime and carceral state over here.

    In this, you remind us that Palestine condenses our struggles.
    Palestine is the name of an inassimilable excess that can’t be
    captured in late capitalism’s regime of signs; it can’t be captured because class power — that self-conscious power of capital’s ability
    to command and that runs between the boards governing our academic institutions and the corporate-financial world — remains an imperially derived power, still entirely contingent upon war and plunder. And so,
    we — we the exploited, the looted, the dispossessed, the racialized,
    the illegalized, the wretched — see ourselves in Palestine.

    In truth I’ve always known it’s your generation that would make this breakthrough. Not just because I didn’t subscribe to the tales of your attention deficits, nor because I have an inflated sense of your
    abilities. But simply because of the historical challenge you have,
    for better or worse, inherited. It is you, born in the shadow of the
    great recession, active shooter drills, and the forever wars, that
    have come of age in the global disorder of the slow collapse of the
    unipolar imperial world. In fact, you were born into a temporality of
    crisis that is uniquely yours: indefinite secular stagnation on the
    one hand and imminent climatic collapse on the other.

    But it’s not simply that you’ve inherited climate catastrophe, an entirely looted commons, neo-feudal inequality, and all but broken
    public institutions, but that the way out of these crises looks harder
    than ever. In some way I believe you’re better for it — for one, your nose for elite-ordained bullshit is all the sharper. But the risks too
    are grave. Nothing would’ve been easier for those in your generation
    than a turn to reaction, or dissociation, or to any kind of escapism.
    Instead before our very eyes, the best of you have decided on
    revolutionary love. It’s no wonder our ruling class is so dumbfounded.
    That your uprising has emerged on the terrain of the university is no coincidence. It’s the university above all that concentrates the
    historical contradictions of our age. And like the good dialecticians
    you all intuitively are, you know that in the contradiction lies the
    hope. Nothing could be more telling of the current scale of the contradictions and indeed the crisis of the university than the
    hysterical, brutal militarized response to your protest.

    You’re practicing everything that academic administrators profess to
    value: collective democracy, civic action, selflessness, empathy,
    diversity, courage, and risk-taking. Yet when these cease to be a
    series of empty signs circulating as operations of value at the behest
    of finance capital, they become a danger. When the university has been entirely financialized then divestment appears like a terminal threat.
    When the “worth” of the university becomes overwhelmingly an index of financial circuits and flows, of market confidence and “belief,” then
    of course the pageantry of robes, regalia, bagpipes, and syrupy vapid commencement speeches attains a hollow sacredness of its own. When
    “the show” is all there is, then of course it must go on even as children—pulled out from the rubble in pieces at a rate of about 95 a
    day every day for 7 months (how’s that for returns?) — are slaughtered
    by weapons our universities help finance.

    The truth is that our universities are financialized corporate
    entities that leak. What we do in them is a kind of leakage that has
    to be captured and regulated as value. Everything from the training of critical thought to the ethics of critical pedagogy, from radical
    study to the questioning of given narratives and histories is a
    leakage that somehow the university-as-private-equity-firm both
    depends on and dreads, both valorizes and heavily regulates.

    Today it’s precisely these leakages that the rightwing assault on
    higher education is coming for. They’re coming to plug the gaps. The Congressional witch-hunts are just the latest iteration. They’re
    plugging the gaps, taking the regulation to its logical conclusion,
    because the ruling classes know very well the size and magnitude of
    the crisis that is not imminent but already here. They know they’ve
    left you with a burning planet, crumbling infrastructures, atrophied democracies, and foreclosed futures. They don’t need people like you
    who think, who question, who critically parse, and less still, people
    who are committed to causes like anti-imperialism and genuine
    universalisms.

    They need technicians, financiers, engineers, and the kind of quiet
    cold competencies of the managerial paradigm; they need people who are
    not invested in the world but invested in stocks, or better yet,
    invested in themselves as figures of a kind of stock, as human
    financial portfolios. And if they have to gut the university to get it
    done, if they have to mobilize every piece of institutional and
    repressive power to do so, then they will. Yesterday it was critical
    race theory. The day before that, trans rights. Today it’s Palestine
    and anti-Zionism — the script changes, but the play is the same.

    The fight for Palestine and divestment today, then, is also a fight
    against the corporatization of the university, against its
    hyper-exploitation of precarious and contingent labor, against its centralization around technocratic administrations, a fight for its
    genuine democratization. It’s a fight for and against the university.
    And if the university is to have any future beyond its corporate
    capture, it will be you and your allies who forge it.

    What an honor it is to step into this breach with you.

    Long live the student uprising, long live Palestine!


    https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/the-student-uprising-is-fighting-for-all-of-us/


    Here is another perspective.


    https://www.creators.com/read/jeff-robbins/11/23/see-no-evil-on-american-campuses-its-tiki-torch-time


    See No Evil: On American Campuses, It's Tiki Torch Time
    By Jeff Robbins
    November 14, 2023 5 Min Read

    A- A+
    Lexington, Massachusetts, is a peaceful town, famous for being an ideal
    place to raise children. Young couples move there from everywhere so
    that their children can attend its public schools, which in
    disproportionate numbers send students to the finest universities in the
    land. Lexington has a robust library serving its hypereducated
    residents, and its own symphony. It is a community of bake sales and
    charity drives and back-to-school nights.

    A walk into Lexington Center one recent morning revealed that
    heart-wrenching posters had been pasted onto a window of a vacant store.
    They said "Kidnapped," and featured pictures of the Israeli babies,
    toddlers, children, elderly and disabled, including Holocaust survivors,
    who had been brutalized by Hamas gunmen on Oct. 7, and then rammed —
    maimed, raped, bleeding, terrified — onto the backs of trucks and
    abducted into Gaza. These were the "lucky" ones, who were not butchered
    to death, blown to pieces or burned to dust by 3,000 Hamas killers who
    invaded Israel for the purpose of slaughtering as many Israelis as they
    could.

    Each "kidnapped" poster had a picture of an innocent soul who is now
    held at gunpoint in underground Hamas tunnels. Any of them who manages
    to survive will live the rest of their lives as a human shell. It's hard
    to believe that anyone could fail to feel for them or to respect the
    idea of keeping them in the hearts of decent people.

    Believe it.

    By the next morning, the posters had been ripped down.

    The ripping down of the posters of kidnapped Israelis by the grinning,
    the leering, the amped up and the cruel has become not just a fad but a
    craze among those who fancy themselves "progressive" while they cheer on anti-Jewish hate, or outright engage in it.

    Ground zero for hatred-posing-as-progressivism is academia, where Jewish students and others who are disgusted by the Hamas massacre of Israelis
    have found themselves assaulted, bullied, surrounded, forced to run
    gauntlets of students screaming for the eradication of the Jewish
    homeland or otherwise harassed while faculty members and their fellow
    students stay silent, or urge it on.

    At the University of Pennsylvania, one student speaker invoked the
    "joyful" images of beheaded and dismembered Israelis from the "glorious
    October 7th," and encouraged her audience to "bring it to the streets." Observed Rep. Ritchie Torres of New York, "This is not a patient at a psychiatric hospital. This is a student at an Ivy League institution."

    At Harvard, a group of law and divinity students surrounded a Jewish
    student walking alone and attacked him. At Cornell, where a professor pronounced himself "exhilarated" by Hamas' massacre, a student made
    death threats against Jewish students. At Cooper Union, Jewish students
    had to hide in a library while anti-Israel protestors violently pounded
    on the door. At Tufts University, one student group issued a statement
    praising the "creativity" of Hamas' various methods utilized in hacking, burning and shredding Israelis to death. At Yale University, a student
    group hailed Hamas' slaughter, praising the group for "making history
    this Saturday morning."

    This is intended to destroy the emotional well-being of Jewish students.
    And it's working. "We want to be able to go to class," one Jewish Tufts
    student told a reporter. "We want to (go around campus) without having
    somebody actively chanting for our demise."

    Those holding themselves out as progressives now closely resemble the
    racists marching at the "Unite the Right" rally in Charlottesville,
    Virginia, in 2017. Those protesters were "expressing" themselves, too,
    marching against the removal of a statue of Confederate Gen. Robert E.
    Lee. They held tiki torches aloft as they chanted white supremacist
    slogans, the torches intended to intimidate.

    Progressives who denounced the hate festival at Charlottesville are now
    staging hate festivals of their own. Their victims are Jews. What would
    never be OK if the victims were others is perfectly OK now.

    They believe they are really progressives. That's what they tell
    themselves and each other they are. But what they really are is the new
    tiki torch carriers. And that is how history will remember them.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Skeeter@21:1/5 to All on Sun May 26 13:40:53 2024
    XPost: uk.legal, soc.culture.jewish, alt.politics.democrats
    XPost: soc.culture.british, alt.atheism

    In article <00455jpb7bjvo6hmmlo3stfi1bsp0j92fb@4ax.com>,
    void@invalid.noy says...

    Dear students,

    What an honor it is to stand with you all, and to stand with you not
    as teacher or writer but shoulder-to-shoulder as comrade and
    accomplice. What an honor to witness this courage and this clarity, to
    be just a small part of the life-affirming time you have opened-up in
    this asphyxiating genocidal present.

    Our liberal ruling class is fond of platitudes about being on the
    ?right side of history.? But these always come long after that history
    has been made and tamed. Let them keep their platitudes. One day they
    will, no doubt, turn them on this moment too; but today it is you, in
    the largest student movement for generations, that are making history.
    Today it is you who teach, today it is you who educate, today it is
    you who lead. And what you?re teaching and learning and enacting in
    these spaces is worth a million classrooms.

    You know as well as I do that this struggle is long and will remain
    fiercely contested by the powers that be. They will keep coming for
    you, first with their overseers of ?civility,? those purveyors of
    ?complexity and nuance,? then with their goons and thugs ? uniformed
    and un-uniformed.

    In the dead of night, they will come for you, they will tear gas you,
    pepper spray you, shoot you with rubber bullets. They will try to
    silence you, smear you, arrest you, scare you. Worse still, they?ll
    patronize you, and talk about your misplaced enthusiasm or abused
    privilege, or how you need to read a bit more history, or how you?ll
    one day outgrow this naivety; they?ll send out their entire gaggle of authorized stenographers to ?advise? you, to ?counsel? you on the
    timbre of your rhetoric or the militancy of your demands (lest you
    alienate the ?community?), or, to ?teach? you about the myriad
    complexities of modern financial investments that couldn?t possibly be divested from things as mundane as genocide or apartheid. But they can
    never take away what you and your comrades across the globe have
    already achieved, the future you?re already engendering in joining the struggle for Palestinian liberation.

    If Palestine has ignited our planetary consciousness once again, it is
    your movement that insists on rising to the moment at the very core of
    the imperial world. It is you who have refused to let genocide become
    our normal; you who have refused to accept ?business-as-usual? in the
    shadow of the mechanized slaughter of thousands of children. You who
    have refused complicity in a genocide effectively administered by the
    world?s most powerful states in the advanced capitalist west, a
    genocide the liberal democracies of ?the free world? fall over
    themselves to arm, finance, rationalize, and abet. And in doing so,
    you have refused our collective gaslighting; you remind us that we?re
    not actually going insane, that this sense of madness is the only
    human response to this global choreography of carnage, to image after
    image after image of ashen lifeless children being pulled out of the
    rubble in the name of ?western civilization and values.?

    It is you who remind us that we revolt not because we have a choice,
    but because we can longer breathe. When Aaron Bushnell, whose act of self-sacrifice in opposition to this genocide remains entirely incomprehensible to our political order, charged that ?this is what
    our ruling class has decided is normal,? he could not have asked for a
    more worthy response. You have picked up Aaron?s mantle, and you honor
    it. As you honor the martyrs of Gaza and Palestine in Hind?s Hall,
    Shireen Abu Akleh Hall, the Lama Jamous Center, and the Refaat Alareer Encampment.

    To the cynical weaponization of identity politics and discourses of
    safety, you have enacted spaces of love and comradeship across
    difference; the beautiful scenes of Passover celebrations in
    encampments under a sea of protective Palestinian keffiyehs have on
    their own shattered the racial-colonial common sense and aesthetic
    order of Euro-American Zionism. But you have also done this with a
    clarity that continuously foregrounds the Palestinian struggle and
    rejects the demonization of Palestinian resistance, including its
    unequivocal right to a war of national liberation. In doing so you
    help us rediscover the language, historical literacy, and courage of
    the Left we still hope to become.

    You know that the fight for Palestine, like the fight for Black lives, indigenous sovereignty, socialist futures, and open borders, is a
    fight for us all. And you also know that the slaughter of Palestinians
    today is prefiguring the slaughter that awaits millions on a burning
    planet tomorrow.

    I see in your uprisings the cumulative knowledge that you have
    cultivated over years of organizing, study, and labor, in meetings and classrooms, on the streets and behind barricades. Your urgency and
    militancy grow organically from this knowledge. You know that the
    fight for Palestine, like the fight for Black lives, indigenous
    sovereignty, socialist futures, and open borders, is a fight for us
    all. And you also know that the slaughter of Palestinians today is prefiguring the slaughter that awaits millions on a burning planet
    tomorrow, that the algorithmic killing sprees of AI-powered drones and quadcopters are already making their way across the earth?s surface,
    that the homicidal sadism of a humiliated Zionism lurks in every
    frustrated supremacist project. You know that the systems of
    surveillance, incarceration, and segregation over there are at work in
    the border regime and carceral state over here.

    In this, you remind us that Palestine condenses our struggles.
    Palestine is the name of an inassimilable excess that can?t be
    captured in late capitalism?s regime of signs; it can?t be captured
    because class power ? that self-conscious power of capital?s ability
    to command and that runs between the boards governing our academic institutions and the corporate-financial world ? remains an imperially derived power, still entirely contingent upon war and plunder. And so,
    we ? we the exploited, the looted, the dispossessed, the racialized,
    the illegalized, the wretched ? see ourselves in Palestine.

    In truth I?ve always known it?s your generation that would make this breakthrough. Not just because I didn?t subscribe to the tales of your attention deficits, nor because I have an inflated sense of your
    abilities. But simply because of the historical challenge you have,
    for better or worse, inherited. It is you, born in the shadow of the
    great recession, active shooter drills, and the forever wars, that
    have come of age in the global disorder of the slow collapse of the
    unipolar imperial world. In fact, you were born into a temporality of
    crisis that is uniquely yours: indefinite secular stagnation on the
    one hand and imminent climatic collapse on the other.

    But it?s not simply that you?ve inherited climate catastrophe, an
    entirely looted commons, neo-feudal inequality, and all but broken
    public institutions, but that the way out of these crises looks harder
    than ever. In some way I believe you?re better for it ? for one, your
    nose for elite-ordained bullshit is all the sharper. But the risks too
    are grave. Nothing would?ve been easier for those in your generation
    than a turn to reaction, or dissociation, or to any kind of escapism.
    Instead before our very eyes, the best of you have decided on
    revolutionary love. It?s no wonder our ruling class is so dumbfounded.
    That your uprising has emerged on the terrain of the university is no coincidence. It?s the university above all that concentrates the
    historical contradictions of our age. And like the good dialecticians
    you all intuitively are, you know that in the contradiction lies the
    hope. Nothing could be more telling of the current scale of the contradictions and indeed the crisis of the university than the
    hysterical, brutal militarized response to your protest.

    You?re practicing everything that academic administrators profess to
    value: collective democracy, civic action, selflessness, empathy,
    diversity, courage, and risk-taking. Yet when these cease to be a
    series of empty signs circulating as operations of value at the behest
    of finance capital, they become a danger. When the university has been entirely financialized then divestment appears like a terminal threat.
    When the ?worth? of the university becomes overwhelmingly an index of financial circuits and flows, of market confidence and ?belief,? then
    of course the pageantry of robes, regalia, bagpipes, and syrupy vapid commencement speeches attains a hollow sacredness of its own. When
    ?the show? is all there is, then of course it must go on even as children?pulled out from the rubble in pieces at a rate of about 95 a
    day every day for 7 months (how?s that for returns?) ? are slaughtered
    by weapons our universities help finance.

    The truth is that our universities are financialized corporate
    entities that leak. What we do in them is a kind of leakage that has
    to be captured and regulated as value. Everything from the training of critical thought to the ethics of critical pedagogy, from radical
    study to the questioning of given narratives and histories is a
    leakage that somehow the university-as-private-equity-firm both
    depends on and dreads, both valorizes and heavily regulates.

    Today it?s precisely these leakages that the rightwing assault on
    higher education is coming for. They?re coming to plug the gaps. The Congressional witch-hunts are just the latest iteration. They?re
    plugging the gaps, taking the regulation to its logical conclusion,
    because the ruling classes know very well the size and magnitude of
    the crisis that is not imminent but already here. They know they?ve
    left you with a burning planet, crumbling infrastructures, atrophied democracies, and foreclosed futures. They don?t need people like you
    who think, who question, who critically parse, and less still, people
    who are committed to causes like anti-imperialism and genuine
    universalisms.

    They need technicians, financiers, engineers, and the kind of quiet
    cold competencies of the managerial paradigm; they need people who are
    not invested in the world but invested in stocks, or better yet,
    invested in themselves as figures of a kind of stock, as human
    financial portfolios. And if they have to gut the university to get it
    done, if they have to mobilize every piece of institutional and
    repressive power to do so, then they will. Yesterday it was critical
    race theory. The day before that, trans rights. Today it?s Palestine
    and anti-Zionism ? the script changes, but the play is the same.

    The fight for Palestine and divestment today, then, is also a fight
    against the corporatization of the university, against its
    hyper-exploitation of precarious and contingent labor, against its centralization around technocratic administrations, a fight for its
    genuine democratization. It?s a fight for and against the university.
    And if the university is to have any future beyond its corporate
    capture, it will be you and your allies who forge it.

    What an honor it is to step into this breach with you.

    Long live the student uprising, long live Palestine!


    https://mondoweiss.net/2024/05/the-student-uprising-is-fighting-for-all-of-us/

    Fuck them domestic terrorists and expel them and make them pay back what
    they owe.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John McCue@21:1/5 to All on Mon May 27 02:20:52 2024
    XPost: uk.legal, soc.culture.jewish, alt.politics.democrats
    XPost: soc.culture.british, alt.atheism

    Followups trimmed to comp.misc

    In comp.misc NefeshBarYochai <void@invalid.noy> wrote:

    <snip political drival>

    What does this have to do with comp.misc ?

    People in the *politics* groups need to learn how to
    use USENET, read this to learn how to post correctly.

    https://www.slack.net/~ant/usenet-posts.html

    Thanks

    --
    csh(1) - "An elegant shell, for a more... civilized age."
    - Paraphrasing Star Wars

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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